摘要:Over the past 40 years residents of, and visitors to, the North Carolina coastal barrier
islands have experienced the destructive forces of several 'named' extratropical
storms. These storms have caused large-scale redistributions of sand and loss of
coastal structures and infrastructure. While most of the population living on the
islands are familiar with the wintertime storms, the damage and scars of the 'super
northeasters'—such as the Ash Wednesday storm of 7 March 1962, and the Halloween
storm of 1989—are slipping away from the public's memory. In this research we
compared the damage zones of the 1962 Ash Wednesday storm, as depicted on aerial
photographs taken after the storm, with photos taken of the same areas in 2003. With
these high-resolution aerial photos we were able to estimate the extent of new
development which has taken place along the Outer Banks of North Carolina since 1962. Three damage zones were defined that extend across the islands from the ocean landward
on the 1962 aerial photos: (1) the zone of almost total destruction on the seaward edge of
the islands where the storm waves break; (2) the zone immediately inland where moderate
structural damage occurs during severe storms; and (3) the zone of flood damage at the
landward margin of the storm surge and overwash. We considered the rate of
coastal erosion, the rate of development, and increases in property values as factors
which may contribute to changing the financial risk for coastal communities. In comparing the values of these four factors with the 1962 damage data, we produced a
predicted dollar value for storm damage should another storm of the magnitude of the 1962
Ash Wednesday storm occur in the present decade. This model also provides
an opportunity to estimate the rate of increase in the potential losses through
time as shoreline erosion continues to progressively reduce the buffer between the
development and the edge of the sea. Our data suggest that the losses along the North
Carolina coast would rank amongst the all-time most costly natural disasters to have
occurred in the United States, with up to $1 billion in losses in North Carolina alone.